Periodic Reporting for period 1 - TAXT (Seals and Sealing Practices in Sasanian Iran: New Evidence from Taxt-e Solaymān)
Período documentado: 2019-09-01 hasta 2021-08-31
Results of the research have been exploited and disseminated in several conference presentations and the publication of one article, with a second one scheduled to appear at the end of 2021 and a third article currently being under preparation. Conference presenta-tions include: 12 Sept. 2019 in Berlin (Germany), 19 February 2020 in Tokyo (Japan), 21 February 2020 in Kyoto (Japan), see the details below and in the attached images.
The work carried out during the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship resulted in new research material, the amount and interest of which far exceeded expectations, and in the new research themes to be investigated. The study of the inscriptions and iconogra-phy have enriched our knowledge of the ties between religion and state as well as the con-cept of royal gift-giving within the context of Zoroastrian pilgrimage. Textual sources in-dicate that from at least the 5th century it became customary that after ascending to the Sasanian throne, the newly crowned king made a pilgrimage from Ctesiphon, the site of coronation, to the fire temple of Ādur Gušnasp. On that and other occasions, e.g. before departing for a military campaign and following a victory, the king would bestow lavish and extravagant royal gifts upon the fire temple as gift-giving was integral to the king’s pilgrimage rituals. Fundamental procedures governed the acceptance, classification, re-cording, retention and disposal of gifts and booties received by the fire temple from the royal court. The objects were safely packaged in bags and boxes, and the packages were probably accompanied by a list recording the items they contained. Packages and related documents were sealed by the royal court, as a guarantee of authenticity before being of-fered to the fire temple. Bullae bearing the impressions of royal seals were attached to a document or a commodity sent by the royal court to the fire temple of Ādur Gušnasp. Such bullae testify to the strong devotion of the royal court to the Zoroastrian priesthood and to the fire temple by paying tribute to the sanctuary.
We disseminated results of the project as follows:
13 September 2019
https://multimediayasna.wixsite.com/muya/single-post/2019/09/26/ecis-9-conference-muya-panel(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)
Prof. Almut Hintze read a joint paper prepared with Dr. Yousef Moradi titled ‘A collec-tion of Sasanian clay bullae found in Takt-e Solaymān: an interim report’ at the Ninth Eu-ropean Conference of Iranian Studies (ECIS 9) which was held at the Freie Universität Berlin from the 9th-13th September 2019
12 February 2020
https://www.soas.ac.uk/news/newsitem146101.html(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)
Marie Curie postdoctoral Fellow Dr Yousef Moradi will be giving two talks in Japan later this month. The first, 'Rediscovering Sarab-e Murt and its Relation to the Town of Hol-wan', will take place during the Sasanian Cities conference at the University of Tokyo on the 19th February 2020. He will then give a talk, 'Takht-e Solayman in the Light of Ar-chaeological Excavations: Report of Seasons 2002-2008', at Kyoto University on the 21st February 2020.
9 February 2021
https://www.biblioiranica.info/persia-552-bce-758-ce-primary-sources-old-and-new/(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)
Moradi, Y. and A. Hintze. 2020. “A New Sealing of Pērōz from Taḵt-e Solaymān and its Historical Context”, Res Orientales, 28: 113-136.
Moradi, Y. and A. Hintze. 2021. “The Seal of Ādur Gušnasp at Taḵt-e Solaymān and Some Other New Sealings Relating to the Ritual Fire”, Res Orientales, 29, forthcoming.
The project has gone beyond the state of the art by providing fresh sigillographic evi-dence, for the first time, on the involvement of Jewish and Christian communities with the economic and administrative structure of one of the most important Zoroastrian fire tem-ples in Sasanian Iran.
The project also has provided evidence for the cultural interaction between the Graeco-Roman world and the Iranian world. There are bullae in the collection suggesting that the Sasanians not only used themes of their own cultural sphere but also that they appreciated foreign iconographies. Several studies have addressed the cultural interaction between the Graeco-Roman world and the Iranian world as manifested in engineering works, such as bridges and buildings, in medicine, and in art, including rock reliefs, mosaics, silverware, and textiles. All these achievements concern the social elite, in particular princes and the nobility. Interaction of the Sasanians with the Graeco-Roman world has received much less, if any, attention in the minor arts such as glyptics. The latter, however, are of particu-lar interest because seals were used not only by the upper class but by members of all so-cial levels of society. They could thus provide rare insights into the imagery used by low-er social classes.